If you were to make a wireless shower head, would it have hydrogen molecules and suck in the oxygen from the air to create water? Would you have to recharge it with hydrogen?
I have engineered a solution for exactly this, believe it or not.
The shower system consists of carbon doped ferrous material coated with a zinc passivation agent. There is a flow control subsystem made of a Cu-Zn alloy which also causes aerosolization of the hydrogen-oxygen payload. The hydrogen-oxygen mixture is pre-processed in a large volume nitrogen container, and precipitated down to the shower system using a combination of thermal effects and manipulation of ambient pressure.
Works really well, only limitation is the amount of precipitate available.
In other words, it’s a metal rain bucket with a faucet.
It would just have a non-removable refillable dihydrogen monoxide battery like all modern wireless devices.
But didydrogen monoxide is also known as hydroxyl acid, and the major component of acid rain.
I’ve already got a wireless shower head. It just uses pipes and water.
My wireless shower head does’t use hydrogen, it just uses a hose to supply the water. No wires though.